Abstract

The anti-11,12-dihydrodiol 13,14-epoxide of benzo[g]chrysene, a fjord-region-containing hydrocarbon, was found to react with DNA in vitro to yield, as the major product, an adduct in which the epoxide of the 11R, 12S, 13S, 14R enantiomer was opened trans by the amino group of deoxyadenosine. The structures of this adduct and other deoxyadenosine and deoxyguanosine adducts were established by spectroscopic methods. In reactions with deoxyguanylic acid, a product tentatively identified as a 7-substituted guanine was also detected. The mutagenic properties of this dihydrodiol epoxide in shuttle vector pSP189 showed that mutation at AT pairs accounted for 39% of base change mutations whereas chemical findings indicated that about 60% of adducts formed in calf thymus DNA involved adenines. Since calf thymus DNA is 56% AT and the target supF gene is 41% AT, the findings represent a fairly close relationship between adduct formation and mutagenic response. Overall, the chemical and mutagenic selectivities for the two purine bases in DNA were similar, though not identical, to those for the only other fjord-region-containing hydrocarbon studied in depth, i.e., benzo[c]phenanthrene. A major difference for these two hydrocarbon derivatives, however, is that benzo[c]phenanthrene dihydrodiol epoxides react to much higher extents (approximately 4-fold) with DNA than did the benzo[g]chrysene derivative.

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